Stewart v. Houston

Harrison, J.

This ivas a proceeding, by motion, in the circuit court, to set aside and vacate a sheriff’s sale o.f'a house and lot, attached in a suit before a justice of the peace.

A transcript of the justice’s judgment, which was by default upon notice by publication, was filed in the office of the clerk of the circuit court, and entered in the docket of common law judgments; and the plaintiff having executed to the defendant the bond required by section 41, of chapter 17, of the Digest, an execution was issued out of that court, directed to the sheriff, and the property attached was levied upon and sold, and Champ. T. Stewart became the purchaser.

At the same term at which the sale was made, Samuel Houston, the defendant in the suit, filed a motion to set it aside and vacate it. Stewart was notified of the proceeding, and appeared and resisted it.

The court sustained the motion, and Stewart excepted and appealed.

The following are the grounds of the motion: 1. That no bond was filed with the justice before the issuance of the writ of attachment. 2. That it did not appear from the constable’s I’eturn that the defendant had no personal property upon which to levy the writ. 3. That the defendant had- sufficient personal property in the township to secure the debt, which the constable, by proper diligence,' might have found. 4. That the sheriff’s return did not show the manner of advertising the sale, or that it was made between the hours prescribed by law.

The first ground is wholly untenable. The statute, upon the subject of attachments before justices of the peace, requires no bond of any kind to be filed before commencing the suit, and none is necessary.

The second is shown by the record to be untrue. The return, which is made part of the record by Stewart’s bill of exceptions, affirmatively and distinctly states that the defendants had no personal property within the township.

We find in the transcript, however, what purports to be a bill of exceptions, reserved by Houston, from which it appears that the court, at the instance of Stewart, against his objections, permitted the constable to come into court, and, in its presence, amend the return; but it sets out neither the original return nor the alleged amendment, and were it not wholly unavailable as such, by thus failing to show what the amendment consisted in, and to designate and point out with sufficient certainty the alleged error of the court below, to enable this coui’t to determine whether he has been deprived of any legal right, there was no order of the court directing it to be filed and made part of the record in the proceeding, and it therefore constitutes no part of it. See sections 6 and 9, chap. 50, Digest, and sections 107, 108, chap. 103, ib.; Lenox v. Pike, 2 Ark., 14; Lawson v. Hayden, 13 Ark., 316.

But, again, if it were properly part of the record, and otherwise sufficient as a bill of exceptions, he abandoned and waived his exception, by reading, as appears by Stewart’s bill of exceptions, the return, as amended, in support of his motion.

No proof was produced, nor could any have been admitted, to sustain the third ground, as the constable’s return is conclusive against the defendant. If it be not true, his remedy is by action against the constable for a false return.

The fourth, and remaining ground, “that the sheriff’s return did not set forth the- manner of advertising the sale, or state that it was made between the hours prescribed by law,” though shown by an examination of the return to be true, can hot affect the sale, or impair the purchaser’s rights under it. Because the sheriff omitted to state in his return such facts as show affirmatively that the sale was advertised in the manner and made between the hours prescribed by the statute, no implication arises from such omission against the regularity of his proceedings; but, on the contrary, the law presumes that he did his duty in the premises, and that every thing required *¶0 be done by him, was done, which presumption holds good until the contrary is made to appear. The law presumes that every man, in his private and in his official character, does his duty, until the contrary is proved. 1 Phill. on Ev., 642; Rex v. Stockton, 5 B. & Adol., 546; Bank of the United States v. Dandridge, 12 Wheat., 69.

The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the case remanded, with instruction to overrule the motion.